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Dozens of drug-related charges are expected after a multi-jurisdictional sweep in the Greater Vancouver area resulted in the seizure of more than 29,000 fentanyl pills, along with a huge assortment of...

In Opinion

Viewpoints

Trails watchmen are there to push mountain-bike agenda
Thank you for your article, Watchmen on Duty. What Mark Wood, who is a paid North Shore Mountain Bike Association employee, fails to mention is that...

In Technology

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OTTAWA - A digital petition once famously forced the White House to provide official comment on an oddball suggestion for stimulating the U.S. economy: building a heavily armed intergalactic space station...

David and Normande Waine feel “blessed” to be living at what could arguably be called the most exclusive piece of real estate in Vancouver, if not in all of Canada. It’s a fully detached 1,200-square-foot house on 1,000 acres just steps away from the ocean. Great water and mountain views and no neighbours, except for the odd coyote or raccoon.

This year, forget about the pressure and hassles of hosting friends and relatives for the Thanksgiving holiday, and instead turn the long weekend into a mini-vacation and end-of-summer adventure at Whistler.

HAMILTON — They are the living definition of creatures of habit. Switch even the slightest part of a daily routine of a football player and you are guaranteed to hear grousing. It would be easy for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats to whine a lot this year, particularly about their nomadic existence.

Napoleon Bonaparte famously opined that an army marches on its stomach.
The same can be said for tourists.
Sunsets, scenery and shopping excursions might be the glossy stuff of travel brochures designed to entice wannabe travellers, but what most of us remember of trips from the past are memorable food experiences.